Summary:

  • Allegations by artist Maria Farmer regarding a 1995 encounter with Donald Trump at Jeffrey Epstein‘s office have resurfaced.
  • Farmer claims Trump stared at her legs and commented she looked 16; she reported this to the FBI in 1996 and 2006. FBI notes from 2006 do not mention Trump.
  • The White House denies the claims, stating Trump never visited Epstein’s office and had barred Epstein from Mar-a-Lago.
  • Farmer maintains this was her only interaction with Trump and that she witnessed no other inappropriate behavior from him.
  • Trump’s previous acknowledgements of Epstein, including a 2002 quote, are again being scrutinized.
  • Trump has dismissed related records as politically motivated; fact-checkers have refuted those denials as false.

Allegations stemming from a 1995 encounter between former President Donald Trump and artist Maria Farmer have drawn renewed attention, as Farmer’s previously reported account of an incident at Jeffrey Epstein’s Manhattan office resurfaces amid broader scrutiny of Epstein’s connections to influential public figures.

Farmer, who has long been a key witness in the Epstein scandal, first shared her recollection of the meeting years ago, but the details gained fresh visibility this week following public release of additional related court documents and renewed inquiry by federal investigators. According to Farmer, she was working in Epstein’s New York office when Trump, wearing a business suit, entered the room and stared at her exposed legs — she was dressed in running shorts at the time. Farmer recalled Epstein quickly interjecting with the words: “No, no. She’s not here for you.”

Farmer said that following the exchange, she overheard Trump remark that he believed she was 16 years old. At the time, Farmer was in her mid-20s.

The artist disclosed this encounter in previous interviews and said she reported it to the Federal Bureau of Investigation twice — first in 1996 and again in 2006. In both instances, according to Farmer, she named Trump explicitly. Although copies of FBI documentation from those interviews remain partly sealed or redacted, available handwritten notes from 2006 reportedly corroborate significant parts of her account, though they make no mention of Trump.

Farmer’s allegations have resurfaced at a politically sensitive time, as calls intensify for the full unsealing of documents related to Epstein’s decades-long abuse of underage girls and the high-profile individuals who associated with him. Her account has been described by some observers as one of the clearest firsthand narratives linking Trump to Epstein’s private circle.

The White House, responding to renewed media attention, strongly denied the allegations. In a statement, spokesman Steven Cheung asserted that “the president was never in Jeffrey Epstein’s office,” and reiterated a previous claim that Trump expelled Epstein from his Mar-a-Lago club, allegedly “for being a creep.” No additional documentation has been presented by the administration to support that version of events.

Farmer has repeatedly stated that the 1995 incident was the only interaction she had involving Trump and that she neither experienced nor witnessed any subsequent inappropriate behavior by him. “Nothing ever happened again,” she has said in prior interviews. Her testimony was previously presented during the 2021 trial of Ghislaine Maxwell, Epstein’s longtime confidante, where both she and her sister detailed their separate encounters with both Epstein and Maxwell over the years.

In parallel, former President Trump’s public statements about Epstein have also come under renewed examination. In a 2002 interview, Trump was quoted as saying: “I’ve known Jeff for fifteen years. Terrific guy. He’s a lot of fun to be with… And it is even said that he likes beautiful women as much as I do, and many of them are on the younger side.” That quote, which has circulated widely in recent years, continues to be cited by critics as evidence of Trump’s long-running social ties to Epstein.

Reacting to the recent developments, Trump dismissed the broader release of Epstein-related records as politically motivated and suggested, without evidence, that the documents were fabricated “by Obama, Biden and Comey.” Fact-checking organizations have found this claim to be false, noting that the key Epstein investigations largely took place under the administrations of George W. Bush and Trump himself, and that both the FBI files and the legal proceedings predating his presidency are well documented.

As attention on Epstein’s network renews, legal experts and former investigators continue to press for more transparency regarding law enforcement’s handling of the case and the full extent of Epstein’s relationships with wealthy and powerful individuals. Farmer’s most recent statements underscore ongoing demands for accountability. While her claims do not allege criminal misconduct by Trump, they offer another glimpse into a shadowy social world around Epstein that, even years after his death, remains only partially understood.

Background:

Here is how this event developed over time:

  • 1995: Maria Farmer encounters Donald Trump at Jeffrey Epstein’s office, where Trump stares at her legs and remarks she looked 16.
  • 1996: Farmer reports Epstein to NYPD and FBI, including Trump in her account.
  • 2006: Farmer reiterates accusations to the FBI; notes confirm meeting but Trump is not named in released docs.
  • 2021: Farmer and her sister testify during Ghislaine Maxwell’s trafficking trial.
  • July 21, 2025: The New York Times revisits her claims, reigniting public and media interest in Trump’s links to Epstein.
  • July 21, 2025: White House denies Trump ever visited Epstein’s office, citing previous distancing statements.
  • July 21, 2025: PolitiFact debunks Trump’s claim about Obama and Biden fabricating Epstein records, confirming investigations occurred under Bush and Trump.